Anglo-Egyptian War: Difference between revisions

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* [[History of Egypt under the British|British occupation of Egypt]]
* [[Mahdist War|British intervention in Sudan]]
* End of The Khedivate Somali Coast
| combatant1 = {{ubl
|{{flag|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|name=United Kingdom}}}}
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Surprise was not achieved; rifle fire and artillery from redoubts opened up when the range was {{convert|600|yd|m}}. Continuing the advance, the defending troops were hampered by the smoke from their weapons blocking their vision of the advancing British. The three battalions arrived in the enemy trenches all together and with little loss, resulting in a decisive victory for the British.<ref name=HCRE2/>{{rp|69}}
 
OfficiallyThe losingBritish Army onlylost 57900 troops while killing approximately two thousand Egyptians,. theSome British armytroops hadcaptured moreby casualtiesEgyptians duewere tobrutally heatstroketortured thanto enemy actiondeath. <ref name="Kochanski"/>{{rp|130}} The ‘Urabi forces were routed, and British cavalry pursued them and captured Cairo, which was undefended.
 
Power was then restored to the Khedive, the war was at an end and the majority of the British army went to Alexandria and took ship for home, leaving, from November, just an army of occupation.<ref name=HCRE2/>{{rp|69}}
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==British military innovations==
=== Railway ===
During the buildup to the [[Battle of Tell El Kebir|battle at Tell El Kebir]] the specially raised 8th Railway Company RE operated trains carrying stores and troops, as well as repairing track. On the day of the battle (13 September) they ran a train into [[Tell El Kebir]] station between 8 and 9&nbsp;am and "found it completely blocked with trains, full of the enemy's ammunition: the line strewn with dead and wounded, and our own soldiers swarming over the place almost mad for want of water" (extract from Captain [[Sidney Smith (Royal Navy officer)|Sidney Smith]]'s diary). Once the station was cleared they began to ferry the wounded, prisoners and troops with stores to other destinations.<ref name=porter>{{cite book|last=Porter|first=Whitworth|author-link=Whitworth Porter|title=History of the Corps of Royal Engineers, Vol. II|year=1889|publisher=[[Longmans, Green and Co.]]|location=London|url=https://archive.org/details/historycorpsroy00watsgoog}}</ref>
 
=== Telegraph ===
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Anglo-Egyptian War}}
[[Category:Anglo-Egyptian War| ]]
[[Category:'Urabi revolt]]
[[Category:Egypt–United Kingdom relations]]
[[Category:Wars involving Egypt|Anglo 1882]]